Publications /
Opinion

Back
The folly of humanity
Authors
December 21, 2021

Simon Kofe, the Foreign Minister in charge of Communication and Justice of Tuvalu, a 25.9 square miles’ nation located in the South Pacific, was standing at the podium in suit and tie. But when he rolled up his trouser, he was barefoot, feeling white sand under his feet, the warm, sparkling clear water up to his knees. A PR stunt filmed at the far end of Fongafate, the primary islet of the capital Funafuti.

Tuvalu’s population is about 11 000 inhabitants, and it is one of the world’s poorest nations. Soon, the idyllic, yet forgotten island in the sun may disappear, drowned by ever rising sea level. One more victim of climate change and the folly of mankind.

Mr. Kofe asked his fellow at the UN- Climate sponsored summit in Glasgow Scotland via video link to look at him closely, “a real life situation”, an island’s representative, not Gone with the Wind, but disappearing in the ocean, its sand and palm tree covered beauty turned into “the frontline of climate change” (Reuters, November 8, 2021).

Not only the tiny island nation in the South Pacific moving towards an abyss, but the whole planet, drowned, burned, suffocated, wiped off by hurricanes,  typhoons, earthquakes, tsunamis,    temperature below 50 degrees Celsius or  50 degrees above, drought and starvation, dying  of thirst, swept away by monsoon flooding, cyclones and the ignorance of mankind, driven  towards the apocalypse by delusions united in denialism, yes, by the egotism of nations ready to sacrifice the future, but not their seats in parliament or  risk to be voted out of the White House.

The Glasgow summit “has been widely described as the world ‘s last -chance opportunity to curtail the existential impacts of the warming planet”, noted Bud Ward, editor of the  multimedia environmental” Yale Climate Connections”(November 5, 2021) adding  the “Economist” “upped the ante”, reminding  that “there has never been a collective human endeavour more ambitious than stabilizing the climate.”( October 30, 2021, https::www.economist.com) ”What then is “success”, asks Ward, “when it comes to  measuring the impacts of Cop26? Is it merely more back patting and high fiving happy face expressions of concern? More words and voices of from commitment, from the many countries participating?  (which is not to mention those national leaders from China, Russia and Brazil and others   in action).

Post Glasgow and post Cop26.

Then comes the hard part, we may by then all wish we indeed had put our best foot forward from the get go?” On October 13, 2020, the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction” (UNDRR) published an alarming study, reporting on a “staggering” rise in climate-related disasters, including extreme weather events: those doubled from 3556 in 1980-1999 to 6681 in 2000-2019; the number of major floods more than doubled, from 1389 to 3254, incidences of destructive storms rose from 1457 to 2024. In the past 20 years, stated the UN report, there were nearly 7350 recorded disasters, including earthquakes and tsunamis, which claimed more than 1.2 million lives and affected 4.2 billion people.

They caused about 3 trillion in global economic losses-close to twice the amount in the preceding two decades.  British insurance broker “Aon” reported in a weather damage study (“Weather, Climate &Catastrophe Insight”, 2020 annual report, January 25, 2021) that the earth   last year, was besieged by a record 50 billion weather disaster, a record.  estimated, global economic loss from all 416 weather and earthquake disasters catalogued by “Aon” amount to 258   billion dollars, wrote Jeff Masters hurricane scientist and air pollution meteorologist in a “Yale Climate-Connection “article (January 25, 2021).

The US scientist recorded a 70 billion loss through wildfires since the year 2000, 75 percent of the losses accumulated over the last five years alone. Since 1980 the United States has sustained 285 separate billion-dollar weather and climate disasters. Total loss:1.8 trillion dollars.

 The costs and losses of severe weather events during the past five years (2016 -2020) exceeded 606 billion dollars, a record for any fiveyear period, alarming trends and figures, which Donald Trump, a climate change denialist, possibly never studied during his White House years. The most expensive disaster of 2020 was the summer monsoon flooding in China-35 billion dollar in damage.

If the 1.5 Celsius border has been passed, and the earth is continuing its fatal warming rhythm, Beijing’s leaders have reason to shiver, predicted scientists; since “each O.5 Celsius of warming increases annual flood losses in China by more than 60 billion dollar” (Bulletin, “American Meteorological Society”, August 1, 2020).

In its disaster report the UN authors concluded ”It is baffling  that we willingly  and knowingly  continue to sow  the seeds of our  own destruction  ,despite the  science and  evidence, that we are turning  our only house  to an uninhabitable hell for million of people.”

“Uninhabitable hell”

Hisham Aidi notes in his Policy brief “Climate change and Ecological Pan-Africanism” (“Policy Center for the New South”, September 2021) that Africa “is often overlooked in international policy conversations about climate change, but the continent has not been spared extreme weather events. (The UN report, October 13, 2020, noted 1192 severe weather or natural disaster events in Africa 2000 - 2019).

By some accounts, “the Middle East and parts of North Africa are warming at twice the global average. Greenhouse gas emissions have tripled in the Middle East in the last 3O years, all of which could make cities unliveable, spurring migration and exacerbating ethnic conflict.” Aidi believes, that climate change aggravated the Syrian Civil war and refugee crisis; an extended drought drove the rural poor into Syria’s cities.”  

For the analyst climate change is a “threat amplifier” in various parts of the Middle East and Africa. ”Recent research shows that rising temperatures and increased rainfall  variability  are undermining  food security  for Farmers across Eastern and Southern Africa, most of whom already live art subsistence levels.”

According to the World Bank (Press release June 7, 2021) 6500 square kilometres of the Coastal areas in West Arica could be degraded by rising sea levels, as population rates swell, making the region home to an estimated 85 million people by 2050.

Hisham Aidi observed:” Rising sea levels are already leading to skirmishes over fishing grounds between Senegal and Mauritania; Irregular rainfall has made life more precarious for the estimate 25 million Sahelian herders, who travel south during the dry season, and then north during the rainy season. Millions have been displaced in Mali, Togo, Senegal and Ivory Coast. And conflict has broken out on the Frontier between Burkina Faso, and Mali, and in Nigeria’s “Middle Belt “region”.

 Debarati Guha- Sapir, Indian Epidemiologist and director of the Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium, co-author of the UN global disaster report, warned: «If extreme weather continues to grow at the same rate over the next 20 years, the future of mankind looks very, very bleak indeed. ”In Dante Aligheris 14 th century epic poem “Divine Comedy” the Italian poet depicted hell as nince circles of torment located with earth .Those ,who rejected spiritual values or perverted their human intellect to fraud or malice  against their fellow citizens were facing the fire. More than 700 years after Dante’s death, all hell has broken loose on our planet, and humanity is turning into sinners, disregarding climate change, nonchalant in their reaction towards one or three degrees more warming of our earth, insulting scientists and environmentalist as liars and their findings as “fake news”.

 Treaties are signed, documents are presented as hope for the world, yet, local and national politics, global competition, and the dark clouds of Covid, are erasing good intentions and hope, which is, we know, “the last thing that dies”, as Vera Nazarian, the Russian-American author, discovered while writing. When Venice is sinking in the floods, or Tuvalu in the South Pacific   has disappeared, it will be late, perhaps too late to save the world. Possibly, posthumously, a tenth circle could be added to Dante’s hell, inferno and fire for  climate change deniers, those who think global warming helps tourism.

 

The opinions expressed in this article belong to the author.

RELATED CONTENT

  • June 20, 2023
    This policy brief was originally published on T20 India website   A decade of poor growth, increased poverty, and political instability followed the serious debt difficulties that emerged worldwide in the 1980s. There are concerns that the looming debt crisis could create similar challenges and result in even more severe consequences. However, the current economic climate differs in many ways from that of the 1980s, when international banks and Paris Club creditors held most of th ...
  • Authors
    Javier Cantero
    June 16, 2023
     This brief was originally published on gmfus.org as part of a partnership between the Policy Center for the New South and the German Marshall Fund of the United States.   Air and ocean temperatures are increasing at record levels despite international efforts to mitigate carbon emissions. The consequences of this failure go beyond its harmful effects on climate patterns to endangering global political, economic, and social stability. Human security is on the line and faces even ...
  • June 15, 2023
    Dr. Zaki Chahir, professeur en économie, a récemment publié un article intitulé "What Type of Trade is Promoted by Environmental Regulations" (Quel type de commerce est favorisé par les réglementations environnementales ?), dans lequel il examine l'impact de la rigueur environnementale ...
  • May 19, 2023
    This Policy Paper was originally published on freiheit.org This study explores how Morocco can successfully develop a green hydrogen market and at the same time contribute to the global energy transition. Authors Rim Berahab and Afaf Zarkik show how Morocco’s bold strategies and investments in renewables can shape a promising future for green hydrogen. They chart a path to decipher the potential of this energy vector, while outlining the elements necessary for the emergence of a g ...
  • Authors
    May 3, 2023
    For over six decades, Morocco has largely equated the achievement of food self-sufficiency (FSS) in ‘strategic’ food commodities to achieving food security. Successive governments have succeeded in guaranteeing the availability of and access to these commodities for the poor and vulnerable. In so doing, they have maintained social stability by fulfilling a basic social contract with the people. This is a major achievement, but the financial, economic, and environmental costs of this ...
  • Authors
    April 26, 2023
    It is estimated that $1 trillion to $6 trillion per year (up to 2050) needs to be invested globally if the world is to stay below the 2°C global warming ceiling of the Paris Agreement and to meet its adaptation goals. Currently, investments stand at about $630 billion per year, way below the original target. And although great efforts have been made in the climate-finance area, more than 70% of the funds deployed have gone to one sector, renewable energy, followed by the transportat ...
  • Authors
    March 7, 2023
    In April 2007, on my first day as vice president at the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) in Washington D.C., I received an informal visit from Thomas E. Lovejoy, a celebrated American environmental scientist who died last year. He spoke to me of a “turning point” in deforestation in the Amazon, beyond which the consequences would be irreversible. He was interested in knowing how the IDB could help in the fight against deforestation. Thomas and the Brazilian environmental scien ...
  • Authors
    Pierre Jacquemot
    February 10, 2023
    La plupart des écosystèmes arides et semi-arides d’Afrique sont dédiés à différents types d’élevage extensif. Ces systèmes sont des acteurs majeurs dans la valorisation des espaces, et des ressources naturelles. En plus de nourrir les humains et les animaux, l’élevage pastoral fournit un revenu de subsistance à des populations qui ne pourraient survivre autrement dans ces régions. Ce pastoralisme est menacé depuis plusieurs années. Dans la quasi-totalité des zones agro ...
  • January 18, 2023
    In recent years, and in light of the mounting challenges associated with the effects of climate change on communities worldwide, discussions have ramped up on the necessity to crowd in private money to meet the sustainable development goals (SDGs) and mitigate environmental challenges t...